cylyinder
Yes, "sly" contains a short vowel sound in the letter "y," making it a short vowel word.
No, the word "rhythm" does not have a short vowel sound. The "y" in rhythm makes a long vowel sound.
Just one short vowel, the O. The Y is a vowel but has a long E sound.
Yes, "likely" is a short vowel word. The first and last vowels, "i" and "y," are both pronounced with a short vowel sound.
The word has a short A sound and a long E sound (from the Y).
Yes. The A has the short A sound as in can and dandy. The Y has a long E sound.
Yes, "busy" is a VCCV word. It consists of a short vowel sound (u) followed by two consonants (s and y), another short vowel sound (i), and ends in a consonant (y).
The usual pronunciation is a short I. The first I has a long sound, the Y has a short sign, and the E has a schwa sound (by-sik-uhl).
The letter i is the only vowel in which. It has a short i sound as in the homophone word witch.
Yes. Three of them. The Y has a short I sound, the O has a short O sound, and the I has a short I sound.
The A has a short A sound and the I has a short Isound. But the Y has a long E sound.
The word typical has 2 short I sounds (Y and I) and a schwa for the A.